NewsNational News

Actions

California governor pardons Robert Downey Jr. for drug conviction

Posted
and last updated

California's governor has pardoned Robert Downey Jr. for a 1996 drug conviction that sent the actor to prison.

Gov. Jerry Brown's office announced Thursday that Downey was among 91 people receiving pardons.

Downey was convicted of felony drug possession after he was arrested on a Los Angeles County highway and authorities found heroin, cocaine and a pistol in his vehicle.

In 1999, he was sent to prison for nearly a year after he acknowledged violating his probation.

Downey's life and career have rebounded, and he stars as "Iron Man" in Disney's films based on the Marvel comic books.

An email to Downey's publicist, Allison Garman, wasn't immediately returned.

Brown's website says that while a pardon doesn't erase records of a conviction, it restores voting rights and is a public proclamation that the person has demonstrated "exemplary behavior."